Abstract: To complement the High Definition decoding of the G45 Express, the P5Q-EM offers up HDMI, DVI and VGA video outputs, allowing you to output HD video right to a home theatre display without any additional expense.89% Rating:

Asus' P5Q-EM motherboard combines an extensive
feature set matched up with Intel's popular integrated graphics G45
Express chipset. The spec sheet for the P5Q-EM certainly reads like an enthusiast
motherboard, but with the added benefit an Intel GMA X4500HD
graphics processor at its core. In addition to its
basic screen display capabilities, the GMA X4500HD graphics component promises support for high
definition video playback, and full 1080p Blu-ray decoding without any hitches or
slowdowns.

To complement the High Definition decoding of the G45 Express, the P5Q-EM
offers up HDMI, DVI and VGA video outputs, allowing you to output HD
video right to a home theatre display without any additional expense. The board
features an optical S/PDIF output in addition to the 8-channel audio for audio
junkies with suitably equipped stereo receivers. The Asus P5Q-EM still
leaves a fair amount of room for expansion; there's a PCI Express x16 slot for
discrete videocards (a must if 3D gaming is in your plans), a pair of PCI x1
slots, and a standard PCI slot. Storage expansion comes care of the Intel ICH10R
southbridge, which adds six SATA
II ports capable of RAID 0, 1 5 and 10. A Marvell controller is used to
control a single IDE port that supports two devices. To round out the package,
the P5Q-EM offers up gigabit networking and Firewire, with a 1394a socket on the
I/O panel of the motherboard as well as header available mid-board.
External-SATA is supplied in the form of an expansion bracket.

The Asus P5Q-EM motherboard
supports all socket 775 Intel processors, including the recent 45nm
variants, running on a 800/1066/1333/1600MHz front side bus. The four DDR2
memory slots support a maximum of 4GB 667/800/1066 DDR2 RAM in 32-bit
versions of Windows, up to 16GB in 64-bit Windows.

The P5Q-EM also includes software and motherboard support for Express Gate, a
fast-loading, miniature operating system that's accessible as a prompt option
after the system is booted. Asus EPU power saving technology is
represented, and as usual is awkward to use. PCSTATS power draw tests and
blu-ray playback tests will get to the heart of the P5Q-EM.

Asus is asking around $180
CDN ($150 USD, 99 £GBP) for the P5Q-EM motherboard - let's see whether this
motherboard really justifies that sticker price with its array of features and extras.

For starters, the Asus P5Q-EM motherboard manages to pack in a
lot of features into a very small space, but its layout doesn't
suffer overmuch from crowding. Indeed, when compared to ATX motherboards that also utilize integrated graphics processors, the P5Q-EM has a good
layout that's easy to work with in the confined spaces of a home-theatre
chassis.

Some of this spatial consideration is helped through
Asus' use of Q-connectors. These little plastic blocks are used as bridges
between the front panel of a tower chassis and the mid-board headers that are
attached to the motherboard's PCB. Plugging in tiny labeled cables
into tiny unlabeled holes has long been the bane of many PC builders, so being able
to simplify the process and make it more comfortable is always a welcome
addition.

Asus Express Gate

Asus Express Gate is a fast-loading, miniature
operating system that's accessible as a prompt option after the system is
booted. Unlike other incarnations of Express Gate that use a dedicated card to
ensure access to the miniature OS, the ASUS P5Q-EM relies on having Express Gate
software installed using an existing Windows installation mounted on a formatted
hard drive. This isn't nearly as useful for troubleshooting purposes, since any
hard-drive corruption that makes accessing Windows impossible will also make the
Express Gate software inaccessible
as well.

Booting into the Express Gate (available from the initial
post screen) only takes a few seconds. The system comes with only a
few embedded applications, some of which are simply extensions of other functions. Asus Express
Gate 'Web' portal is is a slightly modified version of the
Firefox browser. Flash and Javascript support are built in to the browser, so
most web sites and web applications will function properly. The Asus Express
Gate 'online games' and 'chat' functions on the are essentially Flash games
and Java applets that are rendered in their own browser windows. The Skype
client functions exactly the same way it would in a standard Windows install,
and as long as a mic and headphones are plugged into the Asus P5Q-EM motherboard
it's possible to use voice over internet protocol without booting into Windows.

The photo viewer does make use of one feature that isn't
available on hardware-based Express Gate systems: this software variant also has support for USB devices. Unfortunately
there's still not a whole lot that can be done with
USB storage aside from opening .jpeg and .tiff files. If Asus' Express Gate operating system
doesn't recognize a file extension, in most cases it simply can't be opened.
Curiously, Express Gate can't access or modify a hard drive's contents, making it less
than ideal for troubleshooting computer problems... sad, because that respect would
make this software infinitely more practical to the average computer user faced with
a corrupted Windows installation.

While the idea of instant-on computing is certainly
intriguing, its implementation here is a novelty than a practical and useful tool. If
Asus could expand Express Gate's functionality with more diagnostic tools and
the ability to mount hard drives for access and repair (as well as being
able to install the Express Gate software from a simple command prompt onto
a bootable USB device), this software would warrant serious attention.

Next up PCSTATS goes in for
a closer look at the Intel G45 Express chipset, then once we've covered
its HD video accelerating technologies we'll test HD content playback...